It is 14 - 3 = 11 grams more massive.
First you need to find the atomic masses of each element involved in the compound NH3, and add them up to find the total molecular mass of ammonia.Nitrogen = 14.0 gramsHydrogen = 1.01 × 3 atoms = 3.03 grams----------------------------------------------------Ammonia = 17.03 gramsThen you take the mass of nitrogen in one molecule and divide it by the total mass to find the percent composition.14.0 grams Nitrogen ÷ 17.03 grams Ammonia = .822 = 82.2% nitrogen in ammoniaThen you simply need to take 82.2% of 7.5 grams to find how much nitrogen is in that particular amount.82.2% × 7.50 = 6.17 grams of nitrogen in 7.50 grams of ammonia
A kilogram (2.2 lbs) is much too massive to be a calculator. Most likely a modern calculator would way a few grams.
Oxygen is much more reactive than nitrogen, somewhat more common than nitrogen, and tends to form much more stable compounds than nitrogen.
135,998 grams more
Roughly 3.123 liters (at the same pressure). Nitrogen is 78.08% of dry air by volume. 3.123 liters of nitrogen at STP is about 0.14 moles, or just under 2 grams.
No. Nitrogen is triply bonded, and is much more stable at "standard" temperatures than the more electronegative oxygen is.
The nucleus, consisting of protons and neutrons, is much more massive than the electrons.
There is no more or less nitrogen in Antarctica than there is on any other continent on earth.
no you need more grams than that
Er... Grams is a unit of weight, so the more butter there is the more grams there will be. Methinks something is missing from this question.
it weighs not a gram more or less then 25 grams
135 kilograms = 135000 grams 135000 grams is 130000 grams or 130 kilorgrams more than 5000 grams or 5 kilograms